The below image I found an intriguing portrayal of a blizzard. The art itself is very 19th century-ish-- this for me increases the art's intrigue-- specific techniques create a specific atmosphere that's related to a specific era-- it's retro, if you will. Furthermore, I'm in awe with the composition. The artist achieves a flawless balance of negative and positive space weaving together into one blizzardy storm: the horse trudging forward, cranberry red sled in tow while daringly approaching the "dead zone" of the painting-- assumed to cross hypothetical paths with a man and his dog moving in the opposite direction on the other side of the composition-- of which are also approaching the dead zone, yet not quite there. The composition is masterful, the whole "dangerously close to the dead zone" thing implies great. struggling movement. Such as we Vermonters know all to well, is inevitable and heavy correlated to "walking" in deep snow. I like the crossing paths aspect of the art too, this also emphasizes movement. All of this is enveloped by a mystic winter wonderland: an average, rural street transformed into a fantasy land that would put Narnia to shame.
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